Peter Fox Data Science – CSCI/ERTH/ITWS-4350/6350 Week 11, November 12, 2013

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1 Peter Fox Data Science – CSCI/ERTH/ITWS-4350/6350 Week 11, November 12, 2013 Academic Basis for Data and Information Science, Data Models, Schema, Data Tools and Data as Service Paradigms

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Academic Basis for Data and Information Science, Data Models, Schema, Data Tools and Data as Service Paradigms. Peter Fox Data Science – CSCI/ERTH/ITWS-4350/6350 Week 11, November 12, 2013. Contents. Reading Informatics Data models Schema Tools Markup languages Data as service - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Peter Fox Data Science – CSCI/ERTH/ITWS-4350/6350 Week 11, November 12, 2013

Page 1: Peter Fox Data Science – CSCI/ERTH/ITWS-4350/6350 Week 11, November 12, 2013

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Peter Fox

Data Science – CSCI/ERTH/ITWS-4350/6350

Week 11, November 12, 2013

Academic Basis for Data and Information Science, Data

Models, Schema, Data Tools and Data as Service

Paradigms

Page 2: Peter Fox Data Science – CSCI/ERTH/ITWS-4350/6350 Week 11, November 12, 2013

Contents• Reading

• Informatics

• Data models

• Schema

• Tools

• Markup languages

• Data as service

• How are the projects going?

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Reading?• Introduction to Data Management

• Changing software, hardware a nightmare for tracking scientific data (and Parts I, II and III)

• Overview of Scientific Workflow Systems, Gil (AAAI08 Tutorial)

• Comparison of workflow software products, Krasimira Stoilova ,Todor Stoilov

• Scientific Workflow Systems for 21st Century, New Bottle or New Wine? Yong Zhao, Ioan Raicu, Ian Foster 3

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Definitions (revisited)

• Data - are pieces of <x> that represent the qualitative or quantitative attributes of a variable or set of variables.

• Data (plural of "datum", which is seldom used) - are typically the results of measurements and can be the basis of graphs, images, or observations of a set of variables.

• Data - are often viewed as the lowest level of abstraction from which information and knowledge are derived 4

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Definitions ctd.

• Information– Representations (of facts? data?) in a form that

lends itself to human use

• Knowledge– …. Meaning – but watch how this may become

so very important

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Data-Information-Knowledge Ecosystem

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Data Information Knowledge

Producers Consumers

Context

PresentationOrganization

IntegrationConversation

CreationGathering

Experience

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Mind the gap• As we aim to use modern technology to

advance data science:

• There is often a gap between science and

the underlying infrastructure and technology

that is available

• Cyberinfrastructure is the new research environment(s) that support advanced data acquisition, data storage, data management, data integration, data mining, data visualization and other computing and information processing services over the Internet.

Informatics - information science includes the

science of (data and) information, the practice

of information processing, and the engineering

of information systems. Informatics studies the

structure, behavior, and interactions of natural

and artificial systems that store, process and

communicate (data and) information. It also

develops its own conceptual and theoretical

foundations. Since computers, individuals and

organizations all process information,

informatics has computational, cognitive and

social aspects, including study of the social

impact of information technologies. Wikipedia.

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A moment of history

• In the late 1950’s (actually around 1957-1958) the modern informatics term was coined

• Existed for a while but then split into library science and computer science and developed their own fields, became disconnected

• Now coming back to be relevant to science

• Informatics IS NOT just having a scientist work with an “IT/ICT” person

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Advertisement• Spring 2014 – Xinformatics

• See last year: http://tw.rpi.edu/web/course/Xinformatics/2013

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Library science• Curates the artifacts of knowledge

• Organizes and manages them for consumers– Cataloging and classification

• Preservation– ‘maintaining or restoring access to artifacts,

documents and records through the study, diagnosis, treatment and prevention of decay and damage’ (wikipedia)

• Digital age– Curation and preservation

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Cognitive Science• Cognitive science is an interdisciplinary study

of the mind and intelligence

• It operates at the intersection of psychology, philosophy, computer science, linguistics, anthropology, and neuroscience.

• Of relevance for data and information science are three significant theoretical underpinnings– mental representation,– the nature of expertise, – and intuition

• Very relevant to model, data/metadata choice11

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Social Science• Branch of humanities

• Especially as it relates to networks of scientists

• Exploits sociology of groups, teams

• Cultural norms as well as discipline norms– Modes of what and how rewards are given– Between those who produce and those who

consume data (and information)– More

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Information theory• Semiotics, also called semiotic studies or

semiology, is the study of sign processes (semiosis), or signification and communication, signs and symbols, into three branches:– Syntactics: Relation of signs to each other in

formal structures– Semantics: Relation between signs and the

things to which they refer; their denotata– Pragmatics: Relation of signs to their impacts on

those who use them 13

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Note: we have theories for…

• Knowledge -> various forms of logic(s)

• Information (Shannon, Weaver, Peirce…)

• But not ‘Data’ (except for …)

• < reading for this week > sneak peek…

• http://tw.rpi.edu/web/node/3605 (Mealy 1967)

• http://tw.rpi.edu/web/node/3606 (Wickett et al.)

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Mealy’s Introduction• “We do not, it seems, have a very clear and

commonly agreed upon set of notions about data-either what they are, how they should be fed and cared for, or their relation to the design of programming languages and operating systems. This paper sketches a theory of data which may serve to clarify these questions. It is based on a number of old ideas and may, as a result, seem obvious. Be that as it may, some of these old ideas are not common currency in our field, either separately or in combination; it is hoped that rehashing them in a somewhat new form may prove to be at least suggestive.” 15

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Three elements and connections• Relations

• Data Maps

• Access Functions

• The data itself

• Procedures

• Storage and representation

• Descriptors16

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Wickett et al…• “Heterogeneous digital data that has been produced by

different communities with varying practices and assumptions, and that is organized according to different representation schemes, encodings, and file formats, presents substantial obstacles to efficient integration, analysis, and preservation. This is a particular impediment to data reuse and interdisciplinary science. An underlying problem is that we have no shared formal conceptual model of information representation that is both accurate and sufficiently detailed to accommodate the management and analysis of real world digital data in varying formats. Developing such a model involves confronting extremely challenging foundational problems in information science. “

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Premise

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Data Information Knowledge

Context

PresentationOrganization

IntegrationConversation

CreationGathering

Experience

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1. Assume context free• Content and Structure• D=f(x;p)• D=data, f=transduction function, x=thing, p=parametric

dependence (e.g. time of transduction)

• HAVE – Syntax • DO NOT HAVE - Semantics – no meaning without context• OR - Pragmatics – no use without meaning??

• What about - Uncertainty, quality, bias (error) – none without context?

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2. Assume minimal context• Minimal = incomplete?• E.g. know instrument but not when, or of what• E.g. know what but not how

• Partial uncertainty? Conditional entropy?

• Constructive induction?

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Pulling things over from Informatics

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Data Information Knowledge

Context

PresentationOrganization

IntegrationConversation

CreationGathering

Experience

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Information Models• Conceptual models, sometimes called domain

models, are typically used to explore domain concepts

• High-level conceptual models are often created as part of initial requirements envisioning efforts as they are used to explore the high-level static business or science or medical structures and concepts.

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(Information) Architecture

• Definition: – “is the art of expressing a model or concept of

information used in activities that require explicit details of complex systems” (wikipedia)

– “… I mean architect as in the creating of systemic, structural, and orderly principles to make something work - the thoughtful making of either artifact, or idea, or policy that informs because it is clear.” Wuman

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Data Models• Conceptual data models, sometimes called domain

models, are typically used to explore domain concepts

• Conceptual data models are often created as the precursor to logical data models or as alternatives to them.

• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_modelling

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Observation and Measurement

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Mapping model to geochemistry

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Specimen Model

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Conceptual model

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Logical model

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Physical model

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Conceptual model – shoreline photos

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Logical model – shoreline photos

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However as a consumer• Do you ever really see these data models?

• What’s the most common form of making data available to others?

• What’s the most common means? Second most common?

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Page 35: Peter Fox Data Science – CSCI/ERTH/ITWS-4350/6350 Week 11, November 12, 2013

Example XML<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>

<shiporder orderid="889923"

xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"

xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="shiporder.xsd">

<orderperson>John Smith</orderperson>

<shipto>

<name>Ola Nordmann</name>

<address>Langgt 23</address>

<city>4000 Stavanger</city>

<country>Norway</country>

</shipto>

<item>

<title>Empire </title>

<note>Special Edition</note>

<quantity>1</quantity>

<price>10.90</price>

</item>

<item>

<title>Hide your heart</title>

<quantity>1</quantity>

<price>9.90</price>

</item>

</shiporder>

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Very simple schema<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1" ?>

<xs:schema xmlns:xs=http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema>

<xs:element name="shiporder">

<xs:complexType>

<xs:sequence>

<xs:element name="orderperson" type="xs:string"/>

<xs:element name="shipto">

<xs:complexType>

<xs:sequence>

<xs:element name="name" type="xs:string"/>

<xs:element name="address" type="xs:string"/>

<xs:element name="city" type="xs:string"/>

<xs:element name="country" type="xs:string"/>

</xs:sequence>

</xs:complexType>

</xs:element>

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<xs:element name="item" maxOccurs="unbounded">

<xs:complexType>

<xs:sequence>

<xs:element name="title" type="xs:string"/>

<xs:element name="note" type="xs:string" minOccurs="0"/>

<xs:element name="quantity" type="xs:positiveInteger"/>

<xs:element name="price" type="xs:decimal"/>

</xs:sequence>

</xs:complexType>

</xs:element>

</xs:sequence>

<xs:attribute name="orderid" type="xs:string" use="required"/>

</xs:complexType>

</xs:element>

</xs:schema>

Page 37: Peter Fox Data Science – CSCI/ERTH/ITWS-4350/6350 Week 11, November 12, 2013

Markup Languages• Reminder:

– Mixes data and metadata, and yes, information– Tag structure does not always model the

underlying data structure– Modeling the XML itself, i.e. the schema is

another task– Does have the potential benefit that it is more for

use than storage

• Parsing the file:– Incomplete versus complete tags– Empty or optional fields 37

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Data tools (just a few)• Models

– http://www.datamodel.org/– MSDN:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb399249.aspx

• Schema– The Schematron differs in basic concept from other

schema languages in that it not based on grammars but on finding tree patterns in the parsed document. This approach allows many kinds of structures to be represented which are inconvenient and difficult in grammar-based schema languages. If you know XPath or the XSLT expression language, you can start to use The Schematron immediately.

– http://www.schematron.com/38

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Markup Language tools• Any context-sensitive editor

• XMLSpy, XML Notepad, XML Editor, oXygen

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Data as Service• Modern internet architectures allow for

– Service oriented architectures– Resource oriented architectures

• Why is this important for data models, schema, etc.– Hides/ obscures underlying model, schemas– Service interfaces are often a poor/ hybrid match

for underlying models

• UML and ISO 19xxx family of standards, e.g. 19135 are changing the landscape

• Mature in certain settings.40

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Open Geospatial Consortium• Web Feature Service (WFS)

– http://www.opengeospatial.org/standards/wfs– support INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, LOCK,

QUERY and DISCOVERY operations on geographic features using HTTP as the distributed computing platform

– Built on Geographic Markup Language (GML)

• Tutorial– http://docs.codehaus.org/display/MAP/

WFS+Tutorial

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WFS examples

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Open Geospatial Consortium• Web Mapping Service (WMS)

– http://www.opengeospatial.org/standards/wms– produces maps of spatially referenced data

dynamically from geographic information ("map" is a portrayal of geographic information as a digital image file suitable for display on a computer screen). A map is not the data itself. WMS-produced maps are generally rendered in a pictorial format such as PNG, GIF or JPEG, or occasionally as vector-based graphical elements in Scalable Vector Graphics formats.

– http://www.intl-interfaces.com/cookbook/WMS/– http://oceanesip.jpl.nasa.gov/esipde/guide.html

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Open Geospatial Consortium• Web Coverage Service (WCS)

– http://www.opengeospatial.org/standards/wcs– supports electronic interchange of geospatial

data as "coverages" – that is, digital geospatial information representing space-varying phenomena

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Open Geospatial Consortium• Sensor Observation Service (SOS)

– http://www.opengeospatial.org/standards/sos

• SWE Common– http://www.opengeospatial.org/projects/groups/

swecommonswg – Get_capabilities

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Page 46: Peter Fox Data Science – CSCI/ERTH/ITWS-4350/6350 Week 11, November 12, 2013

IVOA (www.ivoa.net)• Simple Image Access Protocol

– http://ivoa.net/Documents/SIA/20091008/PR-SIA-1.0-20091008.pdf

– This specification defines a protocol for retrieving image data from a variety of astronomical image repositories through a uniform interface. The interface is meant to be reasonably simple to implement by service providers. A query defining a rectangular region on the sky is used to query for candidate images.

– The service returns a list of candidate images formatted as a VOTable. For each candidate image an access reference URL may be used to retrieve the image. Images may be returned in a variety of formats including FITS and various graphics formats. Referenced images are often computed on the fly, e.g., as cutouts from larger images.

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IVOA (www.ivoa.net)• E.g. Simple Spectrum Access Protocol

– http://ivoa.net/Documents/REC/DAL/SSA-20080201.pdf– The Simple Spectrum Access (SSA) Protocol (SSAP)

defines a uniform interface to remotely discover and access one dimensional spectra. SSA is a member of an integrated family of data access interfaces altogether comprising the Data Access Layer (DAL) of the IVOA.

– SSA is based on a more general data model capable of describing most tabular spectrophotometric data, including time series and spectral energy distributions (SEDs) as well as 1-D spectra; however the scope of the SSA interface as specified in this document is limited to simple 1-D spectra, including simple aggregations of 1-D spectra.

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Page 48: Peter Fox Data Science – CSCI/ERTH/ITWS-4350/6350 Week 11, November 12, 2013

Discussion• Theoretical concepts- do we have any hope?

• Data models – could you develop one?

• Forms of Schema?

• Service paradigms?

• Relation to data management?

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Page 49: Peter Fox Data Science – CSCI/ERTH/ITWS-4350/6350 Week 11, November 12, 2013

Summary• Informatics in relation to data science

– Discuss?

• Data models and schema and the tools that go with them are plentiful

• Modern use of XML and specific markup languages obscure the underlying data structure (physical and logical) but have other advantages

• Data as service carry this to another level49

Page 50: Peter Fox Data Science – CSCI/ERTH/ITWS-4350/6350 Week 11, November 12, 2013

What is next• Next week – watch your email.

• Next lecture (#12) – Nov. 26th.– Webs of data, data on the web, deep Web,

data discovery, data citation

• Reading:– See web site for this week

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How about those projects?

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